494 research outputs found

    Airborne Visible/Infrared Imaging spectrometer AVIS: Design, characterization and calibration

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    The Airborne Visible/Infrared imaging Spectrometer AVIS is a hyperspectral imager designed for environmental monitoring purposes. The sensor, which was constructed entirely from commercially available components, has been successfully deployed during several experiments between 1999 and 2007. We describe the instrument design and present the results of laboratory characterization and calibration of the system's second generation, AVIS-2, which is currently being operated. The processing of the data is described and examples of remote sensing reflectance data are presented

    Bildung von Naringenin bei der Reife von Tomaten

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    Naringenin (5,7,4â€Č-trihydroxy-flavanon), occuring only in the skin of tomatoes, is formed when the fruit begins to colour red

    Radiative transfer modelling reveals why canopy reflectance follows function

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    Optical remote sensing is potentially highly informative to track Earth’s plant functional diversity. Yet, causal explanations of how and why plant functioning is expressed in canopy reflectance remain limited. Variation in canopy reflectance can be described by radiative transfer models (here PROSAIL) that incorporate plant traits affecting light transmission in canopies. To establish causal links between canopy reflectance and plant functioning, we investigate how two plant functional schemes, i.e. the Leaf Economic Spectrum (LES) and CSR plant strategies, are related to traits with relevance to reflectance. These traits indeed related to both functional schemes, whereas only traits describing leaf properties correlated with the LES. In contrast, traits related to canopy structure showed no correlation to the LES, but to CSR strategies, as the latter integrates both plant economics and size traits, rather than solely leaf economics. Multiple optically relevant traits featured comparable or higher correspondence to the CSR space than those traits originally used to allocate CSR scores. This evidences that plant functions and strategies are directly expressed in reflectance and entails that canopy ‘reflectance follows function’. This opens up new possibilities to understand differences in plant functioning and to harness optical remote sensing data for monitoring Earth®s functional diversity

    Voting by Axioms

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    We develop an approach for collective decision making from first principles. In this approach, rather than using a---necessarily imperfect---voting rule to map any given scenario where individual agents report their preferences into a collective decision, we identify for every concrete such scenario the most appealing set of normative principles (known as axioms in social choice theory) that would entail a unique decision and then implement that decision. We analyse some of the fundamental properties of this new approach, from both an algorithmic and a normative point of view

    The retrieval of plant functional traits from canopy spectra through RTM-inversions and statistical models are both critically affected by plant phenology

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    Plant functional traits play a key role in the assessment of ecosystem processes and properties. Optical remote sensing is ascribed a high potential in capturing those traits and their spatiotemporal patterns. In vegetation remote sensing, reflectance-based retrieval methods are either statistical (relying on empirical observations) or physically-based (based on inversions of a radiative transfer model, RTM). Both trait retrieval approaches remain poorly investigated regarding phenology. However, within the phenology of a plant, its leaf constituents, canopy structure, and the presence of phenology-related organs (i.e., flowers or inflorescence) vary considerably – and so does its reflectance. We, therefore, addressed the question of how plant phenology affects the predictive performance of both statistical and RTM-based methods and how this effect differs between traits. For a complete growing season, we weekly measured traits of 45 herbaceous plant species together with hyperspectral canopy reflectance (ASD FieldSpec III). Plants were grown in an experimental setup. The investigated traits comprised Leaf Area Index (LAI) and the leaf traits chlorophyll, anthocyanins, carotenoids, equivalent water thickness, and leaf mass per area. We compared the predictive performances of PLSR models and three variants of PROSAIL inversions based on (1) all observations and based on (2) a phenological subset where flowering plants were excluded and only those observations most suitable for modeling were kept. Our results show that both statistical and RTM-based trait retrievals were largely affected by phenology. For carotenoids for example, R2^{2} decreased from 0.58 at non-flowering canopies to 0.25 at 100% flowering canopies. Temporal trends were diverse. LAI and equivalent water thickness were best estimated earlier in the growing season; chlorophyll and carotenoids towards senescence. PLSR models showed generally higher bias than the PROSAIL-based retrieval approaches. Lookup-table inversion of PROSAIL in combination with a continuous wavelet transformation of reflectance showed highest accuracies. We found RTM-based retrieval not to be as accurate and transferable as previously indicated. Our results suggest that phenology is essential for accurate retrieval of plant functional traits and varies depending on the studied species and functional traits, respectively

    Tsunami vertical-evacuation planning in the U.S. Pacific Northwest as a geospatial, multi-criteria decision problem

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    AbstractTsunami vertical-evacuation (TVE) refuges can be effective risk-reduction options for coastal communities with local tsunami threats but no accessible high ground for evacuations. Deciding where to locate TVE refuges is a complex risk-management question, given the potential for conflicting stakeholder priorities and multiple, suitable sites. We use the coastal community of Ocean Shores (Washington, USA) and the local tsunami threat posed by Cascadia subduction zone earthquakes as a case study to explore the use of geospatial, multi-criteria decision analysis for framing the locational problem of TVE siting. We demonstrate a mixed-methods approach that uses potential TVE sites identified at community workshops, geospatial analysis to model changes in pedestrian evacuation times for TVE options, and statistical analysis to develop metrics for comparing population tradeoffs and to examine influences in decision making. Results demonstrate that no one TVE site can save all at-risk individuals in the community and each site provides varying benefits to residents, employees, customers at local stores, tourists at public venues, children at schools, and other vulnerable populations. The benefit of some proposed sites varies depending on whether or not nearby bridges will be functioning after the preceding earthquake. Relative rankings of the TVE sites are fairly stable under various criteria-weighting scenarios but do vary considerably when comparing strategies to exclusively protect tourists or residents. The proposed geospatial framework can serve as an analytical foundation for future TVE siting discussions
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